The roots of Austro-German Romanticism will be explored at the 2014 annual Bard SummerScape festival, which once again offers a sensational summer of music, opera, theater, dance, film, and cabaret, keyed to โ€œSchubert and His World,โ€ the theme of the 25th anniversary season of the world-renowned Bard Music Festival. Held in the Frank Gehryโ€“designed Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts and other venues on Bard Collegeโ€™s idyllic Hudson River campus, the seven-week festival opens on June 27 with the first of three performances of Proscenium Works: 1979โ€“2011 by the Trisha Brown Dance Company, and closes on August 17 with the conclusion of the Bard Music Festival. Complementing the Bard Music Festivalโ€™s exploration of โ€œSchubert and His Worldโ€ are SummerScape highlights from some of the great Viennese composerโ€™s most important contemporaries. These include the first American revival in 100 years of Carl Maria von Weberโ€™s opera Euryanthe, as well as a single, semi-staged performance of Schubertโ€™s rarely performed opera Fierrabras; the world premiere theater production of Love in the Wars, an adaptation of Heinrich von Kleistโ€™s Penthesilea by Man Booker Prizeโ€“winning novelist John Banville; and a film series titled Schubert and the Long 19th Century. Together, SummerScapeโ€™s offerings help celebrate the silver jubilee of the Bard Music Festivalโ€”dubbed โ€œpart boot camp for the brain, part spa for the spiritโ€ by the New York Timesโ€”which has, since its founding in 1990, done so much to revitalize the classical concert experience.

For more information, visit fishercenter.bard.edu or call 845-758-7900.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *